MATTER REVOCATION RESTAURANT LIQUOR LICENSE NO. R-9113 (11/16/77)

Appeal from the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County in case of In the Matter of Revocation of Restaurant Liquor License No. R-9113, issued to Marge & Jack, Inc., 2200 Coral Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, No. 2142 March Term, 1976.

Judges Rogers and Blatt, sitting as a panel of two. Opinion by Judge Rogers.

Author: Rogers

[ 32 Pa. Commw. Page 399]

The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board cited the appellant, Marge & Jack, Inc., to show cause why its restaurant liquor license should not be revoked and its bond forfeited for permitting gambling on the licensed premises.*fn1 After hearing, the Board found that

[ 32 Pa. Commw. Page 400]

the licensee by its servants, agents or employees was "concerned in the managing, conducting or carrying on of a lottery on the licensed premises on April 22, 23, 1975." It fined Marge & Jack, Inc. the amount of $250. Marge & Jack, Inc. appealed the Board's order to the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County which, after a de novo hearing, affirmed the Board.

The only issue raised by Marge & Jack, Inc. in the court below and in this appeal is that of whether it was a licensee at the times of the commission of the offense of permitting gambling on its licensed premises.

At the hearing in the court below, a Philadelphia police officer testified that on April 22, 1975 and April 23, 1975 he saw Marge Douglass, who is president of Marge & Jack, Inc., and a man named Jack bartending at a tavern at 2200 Coral Street, Philadelphia. He also testified that he saw Marge Douglass sell numbers bets to others and that she sold bets to him on both days.

At the court hearing, counsel for Marge & Jack, Inc. agreed that "there is indication that the Liquor Control Board approved a transfer of the license for the premises" where the events described by the police officer happened; he contends, however, that because the license was not actually issued until April 30, 1975, the offenses were committed before Marge & Jack, Inc. was a licensee subject to the Board's power.

The Liquor Control Board produced at the hearing below a copy of a letter dated April 22, 1975 sent by the Board to Marge & Jack, Inc. and admitted by Marge Douglass to have been received about a week before April 30, 1975. This letter, we are told, is sent to all approved applicants for transfer and is popularly known as a "15 day letter." It informed Marge & ...

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